Dear HantaYo and WeatherCat shutterbugs,
I just happened to look out the window and the clouds caught my eye. In just 10 minutes checker pattern was lost. Yes, a polarizing filter was used with a 9mm wide angle lens. That is one of the problems with the polarizing filter- it makes the sky too blue.
Still, at least for a first look the effect of the polarizing filter isn't nearly as bad as it can be. At least to my untrained eye, the sky looks normal for a photo with a polarizing filter.
This was the first cut as I have been sick for a 1 1/2 weeks (getting sick in the summer seems to be the worse).
Bummer dude! Getting sick in the summer is indeed a drag.
I just watched a Photoshop training video where to guy took 2 pictures, one with the polarizing filter and one without, so he could mosaic the pictures in photo shop and paint away the too blue sky.
Hmm, clever idea, but all this requires a lot of planning. You sure can't take any moving action with that sort of a strategy. Even if the clouds are moving at a decent clip you might get some "ghosting."
Still a lot of snow in the mountains. It is a slow melt with all the rain (not much at my house with usually less than .10" each day but it is adding up) and cooler temperatures and cloud cover. A lot of the unmaintained mountain passes are still closed due to snow.
Good for you. Alas, we are back to a dry pattern and warming temperatures.
![Sweaty 2 [sweat2]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/sweaty.gif)
Definitely not the best for the stressed plants.
Oh well, . . . Edouard